Just what comes to mind when you think of mechanical engineers? Are they people who design appliances — or people who design airplanes? Or both? Mechanical engineers really do it all, designing and making nearly everything you can imagine.

Timothy Singler teaches undergraduate and graduate level courses in fluid mechanics,
transport phenomena and engineering mathematics. His research interests are in physicochemical
hydrodynamics and applied mathematics. He is presently conducting research in the
areas of interfacial stability, wetting phenomena in metal/metal systems and equilibrium
capillary surfaces. His interests also include fluid mechanical aspects of materials
processing, including soldering and plasma etching processes. Singler was an NSF/NRC
Research Associate at the Space Science Laboratory at the NASA Marshall Space Flight
Center, as well as a senior research scientist at the Franklin Research Center of
the Franklin Institute. He is an active member of the American Society of Mechanical
Engineers and the American Physical Society. Singler maintains the Physicochemical
Hydrodynanics Lab.

Just what comes to mind when you think of mechanical engineers? Are they people who design appliances — or people who design airplanes? Or both? Mechanical engineers really do it all, designing and making nearly everything you can imagine.